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Annotating Text to Deepen Understanding. Doug Fisher and Nancy Frey. Annotation is a note of any form made while reading text. “Reading with a pencil.”. People have been annotating texts since there have been texts to annotate. Annotation is not highlighting.
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Annotating Text to Deepen Understanding Doug Fisher and Nancy Frey
Annotation is a note of any form made while reading text. “Reading with a pencil.”
People have been annotating texts since there have been texts to annotate.
Annotation slows down the reader in order to deepen understanding.
Student’s annotation of connotative meanings in Charlotte’s Web
Annotation in PreK-2 • Language experience approach • Interactive writing and shared pen activities
1 2 3 4 5 Modeled Annotation in Kindergarten Kemp, L. M. (1996). One peaceful pond: A counting book. New York: Houghton Mifflin.
Modeled Annotation in Second Harvey, S., & Goudvis, A. (2007). Strategies That Work: Teaching Comprehension for Understanding and Engagement. Portland, ME: Stenhouse.
Annotations in Grades 3-5 • Underlinethe major points. • Circle keywords or phrases that are confusing or unknown to you. • Use a question mark (?) for questions that you have during the reading. Be sure to write your question.
Using Questioning in Fifth Grade
Same text, different student, different strategy: Inferring.
Annotation in Grades 6-8 • Underline the major points. • Circle keywords or phrases that are confusing or unknown to you. • Use a question mark (?) for questions that you have during the reading. Be sure to write your question. • Use an exclamation mark (!) for things that surprise you, and briefly note what it was that caught your attention. • Draw an arrow (↵) when you make a connection to something inside the text, or to an idea or experience outside the text. Briefly note your connections.
Annotation in Grades 9-12 • Underline the major points. • Circle keywords or phrases that are confusing or unknown to you. • Use a question mark (?) for questions that you have during the reading. Be sure to write your question. • Use an exclamation mark (!) for things that surprise you, and briefly note what it was that caught your attention. • Draw an arrow (↵) when you make a connection to something inside the text, or to an idea or experience outside the text. Briefly note your connections. • Mark EX when the author provides an example. • Numerate arguments, important ideas, or key details and write words or phrases that restate them.
If you want to teach effective annotation, begin with the purpose. https://www.teachingchannel.org/videos/student-annotated-reading-strategy
Teach them a notation system appropriate for your content area